The Handmaiden review – suspense thriller drenched with sex | Peter Bradshaw's film of the week

Park Chan-wook’s adaptation of Sarah Waters’ novel Fingersmith, relocated to 1930s Korea, is an erotic triumph – with a whiplash twist

With his erotic classic In the Realm of the Senses from 1976, the Japanese director Nagisa Oshima achieved the distinction of popularising auto-erotic strangling in the US. Will Korean film-maker Park Chan-wook’s The Handmaiden be able to claim anything comparable? This film’s addictive and outrageous sexiness might just create an international fad for filing down your lover’s crooked tooth in the bath with the finely serrated surface of a thimble. It’s a quasi blowjob scene that sounds bizarre in print. On screen, it was so extraordinary that I almost forgot to breathe.

Park is the veteran of extreme cinema, renowned for his brutal Vengeance trilogy: Sympathy for Mr Vengeance, Oldboy and Lady Vengeance. Now with co-writer Jeong Seo-kyeong he has adapted the novel Fingersmith by British author Sarah Waters – a humid story of crime, love and betrayal that he has transplanted from Victorian London to Japanese-ruled colonial Korea of the 1930s. From this source material, he creates a horribly delicious suspense thriller to compare with Alfred Hitchcock’s Rebecca or Henri-Georges Clouzot’s Les Diaboliques, a drama of double-cross and triple-cross, with some headspinning point-of-view shifts in which Park turns his camera into the most unreliable narrator possible. Halfway through the film, there is a whiplash twist, a spectacular convulsion that flips everything on its head and restarts the story, so that the audience can fully savour the gamey taste of treachery.

Park has three outstanding actors: Ha Jung-woo plays “Count” Fujiwara, a devilishly handsome career criminal and phoney nobleman who recruits pickpocket Sook-hee, played by Kim Tae-ri, to insinuate herself as a handmaiden in the household of a hideous plutocrat and book-dealer. This loathsome old man forces his heiress niece, Hideko, played by Kim Min-hee, to read pornography aloud to his dinner-jacketed guests to induce them to buy his forbidden rare volumes. Sook-hee’s job is to persuade Hideko to accept the Count’s secret marriage proposal and elope when the time is right: the handmaiden’s chaperone presence is vital for this plan. The fake Count explains that once he has emptied his new bride’s bank account, he plans to have Hideko banged up in a lunatic asylum, and Sook-hee can have some of her jewels. But Hideko and Sook-hee find themselves explosively attracted to each other. Who is seducing whom?

The exquisitely beautiful Kim Min-hee is excellent as Hideko with all her gamine innocence, petulance and entitlement, and Kim Tae-ri is superb as the handmaiden herself: smart, worldly, talented in the ways of deceit and yet with an unsuspected streak of romance. Ha Jung-woo swaggers and struts superbly as the predator-conman: his sneery conceit is really funny.

Ha Jung-woo and Kim Min-hee.
Outrageous sexiness … Ha Jung-woo and Kim Min-hee. Photograph: Allstar/Aazon Studios

The film is drenched with eroticism: it permeates the surfaces and textures, the rituals of teacher and pupil – the preposterous pretext for the Count’s visits is that he is teaching her to paint – and of course in the secret theatre of sex that plays out in the world of mistress and maidservant. In the licensed intimacy of Hideko’s bedroom, Sook-hee is allowed to undress Hideko, who playfully pretends to be the servant by undressing her in turn. In the manner of classic Victorian erotica, the handmaiden demonstrates to her awestruck mistress in bed exactly what she can expect on her wedding night.

The Handmaiden is about pornography, albeit pornography of the high-minded connoisseur kind from the Gutenberg age: rare books. Hideko has to read aloud from sub-Sadean material and then – in a fantastically twisted scene – pose on a kind of porn trapeze with a male mannequin. And porn’s undertow of shame has a political dimension. It is a cousin to the mortification of submitting to colonial rule. But sex is the sanctuary from pornography in The Handmaiden, the sex that Hideko and Sook-hee enjoy is the refuge from porn and its furniture of abuse and control.

As for the wealthy book-dealer himself, Kouzuki (Jo Jin-woong) is never allowed to take away from our ersatz Count’s charismatic-villain prerogative, but he is certainly potent and malign, associated with an image familiar from Park’s earlier film Oldboy: an octopus. Maybe Park was inspired by Luis Buñuel’s Viridiana, with its story of the disturbed man and his obsession with his niece. It is certainly a brilliant adaptation of Sarah Waters’ original novel and a film about something that most other movies can only guess at: pleasure and rapture.

Contributor

Peter Bradshaw

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Decision to Leave review – Tang Wei stuns in Park Chan-wook black-widow noir
Park’s tale of a married detective torn between infidelity and moral duty keeps the viewer off-balance at every turn

Peter Bradshaw

23, May, 2022 @6:18 PM

Article image
On Body and Soul review – bizarre and brutal tale of lovers in the slaughterhouse
In this strange, unsettling romance, a Hungarian abattoir provides the backdrop for an affair between two workers that exists only when they sleep

Peter Bradshaw

21, Sep, 2017 @2:30 PM

Article image
The Handmaiden: the return of erotic cinema
Eroticism has long been a dirty word in film. But a new thriller about a clandestine affair between two women in 1930s Korea returns the genre to its transgressive roots.

Peter Bradshaw

14, Mar, 2017 @7:00 AM

Article image
Moffie review – swooning eroticism in apartheid South Africa | Peter Bradshaw's film of the week
A gay, white teenager endures the terrors of national service while hiding his sexuality in a drama that’s grimly compelling – and beautifully tender

Peter Bradshaw

23, Apr, 2020 @6:00 AM

Article image
Border review – into the woods for a body-horror romance | Peter Bradshaw's film of the week
Ali Abbasi’s dark drama focuses on transgression and taboo as two troubled people living on the edge of society develop a strange friendship

Peter Bradshaw

07, Mar, 2019 @11:00 AM

Article image
An Impossible Love review – Catherine Corsini's tender tragedy | Peter Bradshaw's film of the week
A daughter’s life is shaped by her father’s arrogance and her mother’s humility, in Catherine Corsini’s beautiful film

Peter Bradshaw

03, Jan, 2019 @6:00 AM

Article image
Joyland review – subtle trans drama from Pakistan is remarkable debut
Saim Sadiq’s film explores the unsettled social and sexual identities of a widower and his children with delicacy and tenderness

Peter Bradshaw

22, Feb, 2023 @9:00 AM

Article image
The Worst Person in the World review – Nordic romcom is an instant classic
Renate Reinsve is sublime as a young woman veering between lovers in a film that reminds us of the genre’s life-affirming potential

Peter Bradshaw

24, Mar, 2022 @1:10 PM

Article image
The 50 top films of 2017 in the UK: No 6 The Handmaiden
Continuing our countdown of the year’s finest films, Peter Bradshaw praises Park Chan-wook’s dazzling film about a lesbian love affair in 1930s Korea

Peter Bradshaw

15, Dec, 2017 @6:00 AM

Article image
Passengers review – Chris Pratt falls for Jennifer Lawrence in space
Its two twinkling stars are perfectly matched in this appealing sci-fi romance set aboard a vast spaceship as it hurtles through the void

Peter Bradshaw

22, Dec, 2016 @3:30 PM